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PIPRAWA

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Originally appearing in Volume V21, Page 637 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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PIPRAWA  , a

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village on the Birdpur estate in the
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Basti
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district,
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United Provinces, India . It lies on the Uska-
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Nepal road at mile 19.75; and about
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half a mile south of the boundary pillar numbered 44 on the frontier
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line between
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British and Nepalese ' A surname given to Pippin III. on the strength of a legendary anecdote related by the monk of St Gall.territory . The village is celebrated as the site of the following
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discovery: In '896
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interest having been aroused by the discovery, only twelve miles away, of the
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Buddha's birthplace (see LuMB'NI), William Peppe, then
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resident manager of the Birdpur estate, opened a ruined tope or
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burial
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mound situate at Piprawa, but nothing of importance was found . In
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January 1897 he carried the
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work of excavation farther . A well, 'o ft. sq., was dug down the centre of the mound . After digging through 18 ft. of solid
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brickwork set in clay a massive stone coffer was found lying due magnetic north and south . Its dimensions were, 4 ft . 4 in. by 2 ft . 84 in. and 2 ft . 24 in. high . The stone lid of the coffer was split into four pieces; but the coffer remained perfectly closed, so accurately was the lid fitted into flanges on the sides of the box . The pieces were thus firmly held in their place, and the contents of the coffer were found intact .

These consisted of five vessels, two vases, a bowl and a

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casket being made of steatite, and the fifth, also a bowl, of crystal . All these vessels are beautifully worked, the crystal bowl especially, with its fish-shaped cover handle, being as a work of
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art of high merit.' The coffer is of
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fine hard
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sandstone of
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superior quality, and has been hollowed out, at the cost of vast labour and expense, from a solid block of rock . Peppe calculates its
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weight, lid included, at 1537 lb . It is only the
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great solidity of this coffer which has preserved the contents . A cover of one of the vases was found dislodged and lying on the bottom of the stone coffer . As this cover fits very well it must have required a quite violent shock to remove' it . This was almost certainly the shock of an
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earthquake, and the same shock probably caused the split in the stone lid of the coffer itself . The vessels contained a dark dust, apparently disintegrated ashes, small pieces of bone, and a number of small pieces of jewelry in gold,
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silver, white and red cornelian,
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amethyst,
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topaz, garnet,
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coral and crystal . Most of these are perforated for mounting on threads or wires, and had been, no doubt, originally connected together to form one or more of the elaborate girdles, necklaces and breast ornaments then worn by the
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women.' On the bottom of the stone box there was similar dust, pieces of bone and jewelry, and also remains of what had been vessels of wood . The knob forming the handle of one of these wooden receptacles was still distinguishable . The
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total quantity of scraps of bone may have amounted to a wineglassful . An inscription ran round one of the steatite vases just below the lid.' The words mean: This shrine for ashes of the Buddha, the Exalted One, is the pious work of the Sakiyas, his brethren, associated with their sisters, and their children, and their wives .

The thirteen words, in a

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local dialect of
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Pali, are written in very ancient characters, and are the
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oldest inscription as yet discovered in India . Twelve out of the thirteen are well-known words, the interpretation of which is not open to doubt . One word, rendered above by " pious work," has not been found else-where, and its derivation is open to discussion . The explanation here adopted as most probable was put forward by Professor Pischel of Berlin.' The phrase " pious work " probably had a precise technical
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connotation like the
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English " benefaction." The monument must have been of imposing appearance . The diameter (on the ground level) of the dome is '16 ft . For 8 ft. from the
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summit of the ruin it was not possible to trace the outline . At that point the
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outer wall, if one may so call it, of the solid dome could be traced, and had a diameter of 68 ft . The dome, therefore, sloped inwards' ft. for every 3 ft. in height, in other words, it was, like all the most ancient of these artificial burial domes in India, a shallow dome, and cannot have been more than about 35 ft. high exclusive of the ornament or "tee" on the summit . We have in bas-reliefs of the 3rd century representations of what these ornaments were like—small ' An
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illustration from a photograph is given in Rhys Davids' Buddhist India, p . 131 . 3 For figures of the jewelry found see the
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plate in Mr Pepp6's article, reproduced in Rhys Davids' Buddhist India, p . 89 .

For the jewelry of the

time, ibid., pp . 9o, 91 . ' See illustration ibid., p . 129 . Zeitschrift der deutschen morgenlandischen Gesellschaft, tvi . '57 . square erections, like a shrine or small temple, surmounted by a canopy called from its shape a T . They were then more than a third of the height of the dome itself . The total height of this Sakiya tope will therefore have been approximately a little under 50 ft . It was probably surrounded by a carved wooden railing, but this has long since disappeared . All such monuments hitherto discovered in India were put up in honour of some religious teacher, not in memory of royal persons, generous benefactors, politicans, or soldiers or private persons, however distinguished . And we need have no hesitation in accepting this as a monument put up over a portion of the ashes from the funeral pyre of Gotama the Buddha .

The

account of the
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death and cremation of the Buddha, preserved in the Buddhist
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canon, states that one-eighth portion of the ashes was presented to the Sakiya clan, and that they built a thupa, or memorial mound, over it.' Mr Peppe presented the coffer and vases with specimens of the jewelry to the museum at
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Calcutta where they still are . He also gave specimens of the trinkets to the
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Asiatic Society in
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London . Pepp6's
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original article is in the ,.'routnr: of the Royal Asiatic Society for 1898, pp . 573 sqq . Commcrts upon it, one or two of them sceptical, are in the same jou'-..a1 1898, pp . 579, 588, 387, 868; 1899, p . 425; 1901, p . 398: 1905 p . 679; 1906, pp . 149 sqq . See also A . Barth, Comptes rendue, de l'academie
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des inscriptions (1898),
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xxvi., 147, 233; Sylvain Levy .

Journal des savants (19o5) PP• 540 sqq.; and R . Pischel and RI ys Davids as quoted above . (T . W . R .

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